A tall, slender Method-trained actor, Bruce Dern has utilized his good looks and striking blue eyes in both heroic and villainous roles. Director Elia Kazan saw the young actor in a production of Sean O'Casey's "Shadow of a Gunman" in 1959, auditioned and trained Dern at the Actors Studio and later cast the performer in "Wild River" (1960). In the 1960s, Dern moved easily between TV and features. On the small screen, he made guest appearances on shows from "Wagon Train" to "The Fugitive" and was a regular on the Western series "Stoney Burke" (ABC, 1962-63). In an episode of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents", Dern so successfully played a psychotic that he was typecast in similar roles for much of his early career.
On the big screen, he was a sailor in Hitchcock's "Marnie" and Bette Davis' victim in "Hush ... Hush, Sweet Charlotte" (both 1964). In 1966, Dern hooked up with Roger Corman and appeared in a number of films for American International, including "The Wild Angels" (1966), "The St Valentine's Day Massacre" and "The Trip" (both 1967) and "Bloody Mama" (1970). The actor also began to display his versatility beginning with the taut drama "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" and the Western spoof "Support Your Local Sheriff" (both 1969). He won critical praise as the zealous basketball coach in Jack Nicholson's "Drive, He Said" (1971), the rebellious botanist in Douglas Trumbull's "Silent Running" (1972), the con man known as "The King of Marvin Gardens" (also 1972) and as the wealthy, spoiled Tom Buchanan in Jack Clayton's "The Great Gatsby" (1974). Dern had one of his best screen roles as the disillusioned Vietnam veteran who returns to find his wife involved with a paraplegic in Hal Ashby's "Coming Home" (1978). Other highlights include "That Championship Season" (1982), in which he was mayor desperately attempting to win re-election and "After Dark, My Sweet" (1990), as a weasely con man.
Since the early 1990s, Dern has also turned up frequently in TV-movies of varying qualities, and continued to make usually small appearances on the big screen in films including "Diggstown" (1992), "Mulholland Falls" (1996), "Down Periscope" (1996), "Last Man Standing" (1996), "The Haunting" (1999), "All the Pretty Horses" (2000) and "The Glass House" (2001). Dern got one of his highest profile late-career roles when he appeared in writer-director Patty Jenkins' "Monster" (2003), the story of real-life female serial killer Aileen Wournos, playing Thomas, one of the only trusted men in Wournos' tragic life.